Boost Your Credit Score in 2 Easy Steps

Whether you graduated school last week or last decade, you still have a very important grade to worry about: your credit score. This magic number is essentially a measure of how financially reliable you are and helps determine whether you can get a credit card, car loan, mortgage or other credit product -- and it affects the interest rate you'll face on your debt.

A high score will get you better rates and big savings. The FICO score, the most widely used model, ranges from 300 to 850. If you hit 760 or higher, you’ll earn an average rate of 4.6% on a $300,000 30-year fixed-rate mortgage. Scores between 620 and 639, however, fetch a rate of 6.2%, on average. So those top marks could save you nearly $300 on monthly mortgage payments, or more than $3,500 a year.

How to Track Your Credit Score

At www.annualcreditreport.com, you can get your credit report free once a year from each of the three credit bureaus -- Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. If you find any discrepancies in your report, be sure to dispute them. (See how associate editor Jessica L. Anderson fought an error on her own report in I Beat the Credit Bureaus.) A clean report can not only pump up your score but also help you land a job: According to the Society for Human Resource Management, 13% of employers said in a recent survey that they run credit-background checks on all job candidates, and 47% look at your credit report once you make it further into the hiring process.

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When you get your report, you’ll have to pay to learn your credit score. Each credit bureau will assign you a score based on its individual report on you. Equifax and TransUnion continue to issue FICO scores, created by Fair Isaac, which you can buy at www.myfico.com for $15.95. And for $7.95, Experian will sell you the VantageScore, a new model for scoring that all three bureaus created and which a growing number of financial institutions are taking into account.

The Challenges of Earning a Good Credit Score as a Young Adult

Earning a good score is less about your net worth and more about how you manage the money you have. In other words, there's plenty you can do to alter your score, and the sooner you start working on it, the better.

Unfortunately, fewer candles on your birthday cake means fewer opportunities thus far to prove your creditworthiness. “It does take a certain amount of credit history to develop a high FICO score,” says Barry Paperno, consumer operations manager of MyFico.com. “Anybody who’s new to credit is going to have a little difficulty getting a loan, particularly with credit products that require a very high score.” In fact, according to a recent survey from FindLaw.com, a consumer legal Web site, 18- to 34-year-olds are more than twice as likely to be turned down for a loan as any other age group.

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That's bad news for my hubby and me. Like many young newlyweds, Dave and I are aspiring homeowners. And I worry that our credit scores -- specifically mine, as we discussed in our first money talk -- will keep us out of our dream house. We’ll have an especially tough time getting a good rate with today’s tightening credit standards. “What you could have gotten with a 740 in the past, you now need a 760,” says Paperno. “If you’re working your way slowly up the credit-score ladder, it’s going to take you a little longer.”

We’re still a couple years away from saving enough for a down payment, so we have plenty of time to boost our scores and improve our chances of earning the best mortgage rate.

The 2 Most Important Practices in Building a Strong Credit Score

To pump up your own score, I invite you to join me in focusing on the two fundamental practices that have a big effect on credit scores:

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1) Pay your bills on time, every time. Payment history is the biggest factor in your scores, counting for 35% of your FICO score and 32% of your VantageScore. So paying your bills on time can be a big score booster.

Since first tracking my credit score three years ago, I've focused on paying every bill on time. Sure, I slipped up once or twice along the way, but my score now stands more than 130 points taller. As my dad always taught me, though, I can never rest on my laurels: According to MyFico.com’s simulator, if I miss even one payment in the coming months, my score could drop by nearly 100 points. “When you have a very limited amount of credit experience, the good and the negative tend to be more magnified,” says Paperno.

2) Use available credit sparingly. The second biggest influence on your score is your credit-utilization ratio. Maxing out your cards is a big no-no, even if you pay them off every month. Since December, for example, when I had last checked my FICO score, I've paid special attention to limiting my new spending with an eye on my overall credit utilization at all times. That action alone already has hiked up my score by more than 50 points.

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But you need to strike a balance. Locking up your cards and using no credit at all can also have a negative impact. “What’s important to show is that you use credit and you use it responsibly,” says Paperno, who recommends keeping a ratio in the single digits to get the best score. For example, FICO "High Achievers" -- the goody-two-shoes with scores of 760 or more -- use 7% of their available credit each month, on average.

For example, if you have two cards, each with a $1,000 limit, and you’ve charged $500 on one card and left the other card untouched, your ratio would be 25%. Closing the unused card would immediately bump your usage up to 50% and likely knock down your score.